Thomas Yaeger's books available free during the Smashwords Summer and Winter sale in July 2022
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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1y ago
All my books will be available free of charge during the Smashwords Summer and Winter sale in July 2022. The books can be found at:  https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/tpyaeger  No coupons are necessary to acquire these books.  Feel free to post responses.  Best, Thomas Yaeger ..read more
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 https://shrineinthesea.blogspot.com/2021/02/...
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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2y ago
 https://shrineinthesea.blogspot.com/2021/02/the-paradoxical-nature-of-reality.html ..read more
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The Party's most essential command - Orwell
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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2y ago
 "The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command." George Orwell, 1984,  ..read more
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Spirituality, Philosophy and Psychedelics
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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2y ago
Thomas, long time no hear. I was curious to get your take on something that I'm not sure sure what to make of, intellectually and emotionally: the increasingly popular idea that Western spirituality, but more concretely, Greek spirituality is rooted in psychedelic experience. It seems that the Eleusinian mysteries in particular are now being identified as quasi-mushroom cults, while Shamanic transformation is also more and more considered a product of substance use. Again, not sure what to make of it. I mean, would there be no Plato, Empedocles or Pythagoras without mushrooms? Is that the id ..read more
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The Knower and the Known
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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2y ago
  A few years ago I had a disturbing conversation with an Egyptologist I'd known for many years. I'd mentioned a comment I'd made in public about the Pharaoh Akhenaten, to the effect that his heresy was no longer as unfathomable as it once seemed to be. Then, out of nowhere, my qualities as a scholar were attacked, with arguments which had no foundation at all. She knew me well enough to know that her charges were baseless, but nevertheless, the charges were made, and with force.  One of the most puzzling experiences I've ever had. Though I'd seen the Egyptologist let fly in such a ..read more
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Free books by Thomas Yaeger, from Smashwords during July
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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3y ago
13th annual July Smashwords Summer/Winter sale, running July 1 through July 31. Starts at midnight Pacific Time. Sale now open! All my books are free during the month. https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/tpyaeger #Philosophy #AncientHistory Further details at: https://shrineinthesea.blogspot.com/2019/02/the-roots-of-philosophy-four-books-by.html ..read more
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A Timeline of Texts
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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3y ago
My intellectual history is quite complicated. I wrote half a million words between 1986 and 1989, very little of which is available (Meditations on the Egyptian Ka and Coelum Terrae were both written on an IBM golfball typewriter in 1988, but most other stuff was written in longhand). I was always focussed on ancient history, but I spent a long time studying the English and Italian renaissances as well, which taught me many things which were useful in the study of antiquity. Particularly how to read images. I was writing before the advent of a useful internet, and Tim Berners Lee’s World Wi ..read more
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The Tedium of Immortality
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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3y ago
Episode nine in the BBC R4 series (2016) 'A History of the Infinite' by the philosopher Adrian Moore) begins with a scene from the opera ‘The Makropulos Case’ by the Czech composer Janáček. The premise of the opera is simple: more than three hundred years earlier the heroine of the opera, Elina Makropulos, was given an elixir of life by her father, the court physician. She is now nearly three hundred and fifty years old. She has reached a state of utter indifference to everything, and her life has lost its meaning. In the opera excerpt she sings a lament: ‘Dying or living it is all ..read more
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Calculus and the Infinitesimals: 'The Ghosts of Departed Quantities'
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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3y ago
  In this  episode of Adrian Moore's 'A History of Infinity' (BBC R4, 2016), the subject is the nature and development of the calculus. It begins with the observation that to divide zero by zero, or zero into anything at all, makes no sense. If you know anything about the calculus, it is clear what is being talked about in this episode, but the way it is discussed is lacking in the kind of precise description you might expect.  A train is used as an illustration. Travelling a distance of sixty miles over an hour means that the train had an average speed of sixty miles an hour ..read more
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A Sense of Divinity - Descartes and Kant
Thomas Yaeger's Blog
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3y ago
The fourth programme of Adrian Moore's 'A History of the Infinite' (BBC R4, 2016) discusses the views of Rene Descartes in the sixteenth century, and also the views of philosophers from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment. I haven’t added up the number of centuries of thought which have not been discussed at all, but so far argument has been drawn from the sixth century B.C.E. (Pythagoras) fourth century B.C.E. (Aristotle, Zeno), the third century C.E. (Plotinus), the 13th century C.E. (Aquinas), and the 16th century C.E. (Bruno). Which is a journey of around twenty centuries.&nbs ..read more
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